www.woman-health.org Homepage Women's Health Gynecology Obstetrics Medline Women's health Guide
default
Search
May 22, 2012
Table of Contents

1 Introduction
Jocelyn Bell Burnell

Wikipedia

 

S. Jocelyn Bell Burnell (born Susan Jocelyn Bell, 15 July 1943), United Kingdom|British astrophysicist and Religious Society of Friends|Quaker who discovered the first radio pulsars with her thesis advisor Antony Hewish. Born in Northern Ireland, Bell Burnell attended the University of Glasgow and then Cambridge University. At Cambridge, she worked with Hewish and others to construct a radio telescope for using interplanetary scintillation to study quasars, which had recently been discovered (interplanetary scintillation allows compact sources to be distinguished from extended ones). Detecting a bit of "scruff" on her chart recorder papers that tracked across the sky with the stars, Bell Burnell found that the signal was regularly pulsing, about once each second. Temporarily dubbed "Little Green Man 1" the source was eventually identified as a rapidly rotating neutron star.

After finishing her PhD, Bell Burnell worked at the University of Southampton, University College London and the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh, before becoming Professor of Physics at the Open University for ten years, and then a visiting professor at Princeton University. Before retiring Bell Burnell was Dean of Science at the University of Bath between 2001 and 2004, and was President of the Royal Astronomical Society between 2002 and 2004. She is currently a visiting professor at Oxford University.

Although she (famously) did not share the Nobel Prize with Hewish for her discovery, she has been honored by many other organizations. She has won the Oppenheimer Prize, the Michelson Medal of the Franklin Institute, the Beatrice M. Tinsley Prize of the American Astronomical Society, the Magellanic Premium of the American Philosophical Society, the Jansky Lectureship of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, and the Herschel Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society. She has been awarded numerous honorary degrees, and is a Commander of the Order of the British Empire as well as a Fellow of the Royal Society.





  • Nobel Prize controversies






  • http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/Phase2/Burnell,_Jocelyn_Bell@841234567.html biography - compiled by Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics

  • http://cosmos.colorado.edu/stem/courses/common/documents/chapter7/Bell.html - An after-dinner speech by Jocelyn Bell Burnell on her life and the discovery of pulsars


Category:1943 births|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:Quakers|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:British astronomers|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:Women scientists|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:Members and associates of the US National Academy of Sciences|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:Commanders of the British Empire|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
Category:Fellows of the Royal Society|Burnell, Jocelyn Bell
de:Jocelyn Bell Burnell
fr:Jocelyn Bell
ja:???????????????????????????????????????


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jocelyn Bell Burnell".


Last Modified:   2005-12-19


Search
All informatin on the site is © www.woman-health.org 2002-2011. Last revised: January 2, 2011
Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights.
To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: